The present invention relates to a method and to an apparatus for producing oxygen by separating air using cryogenic distillation.
One object of the invention is to reduce the specific energy of separation of low-pressure low-purity oxygen, particularly in schemes where the pressurized nitrogen is not realized as an asset in its own right by the end-customer.
The object of the invention is achieved via the use of a scheme employing three vaporizers in the low-pressure column, in which:
Depending on variables, the specific energy saving represents between 0.5% and 7%.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,006,139 describes a method for producing nitrogen using a low-pressure column the bottom vaporizer of which is heated by a flow of medium-pressure nitrogen compressed in a cold compressor. According to the invention, there is also a proposal to use several turbines in order better to optimize the exchange line.
The method of the present invention produces gaseous oxygen and preferably does not produce nitrogen from the medium-pressure column.
One subject of the invention provides a method for producing oxygen by separating air using cryogenic distillation in an installation comprising a double column comprising a medium-pressure and a low-pressure column, the low-pressure column containing a bottom vaporizer, an intermediate vaporizer and an upper vaporizer, in which method:
According to other optional aspects:
Another aspect of the invention provides an apparatus for producing oxygen by separation of air using cryogenic distillation comprising a double column comprising a medium-pressure column and a low-pressure column, the low-pressure column containing a bottom vaporizer, an intermediate vaporizer and an upper vaporizer, a purification unit, an exchange line, at least one first turbine, at least one cold compressor, means for sending compressed air, purified in the purification unit and cooled in the exchange line, to the medium-pressure column of the double column, means for withdrawing an oxygen-rich fluid from the low-pressure column, means for possibly heating it up, said means consisting at least in part of the exchange line and means for sending the heated-up oxygen-rich fluid sent to the customer, means for splitting the nitrogen tapped off from the medium-pressure column into at least three parts, means for sending a first part of the nitrogen to a first turbine, means for sending a second part of the nitrogen to a cold compressor where its pressure can be raised, means for sending the raised-pressure second part to the bottom vaporizer, means for sending the nitrogen thus condensed to at least one column of the double column, means for sending a third part of the nitrogen to the upper vaporizer, without a pressure modifying means downstream of the column from which it was tapped off and upstream of the upper vaporizer, means for sending the nitrogen thus condensed being sent to at least one column of the double column, means for sending a gaseous flow to the intermediate vaporizer, this flow consisting of purified and cooled compressed air or of nitrogen tapped off from the medium-pressure column and compressed in the second cold compressor.
The apparatus may possibly comprise:
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to
Rich liquid 25, lean liquid 61 and possibly a liquid 27 somewhat like liquid air are sent from the medium-pressure column 15 to the low-pressure column 17 as reflux flows after supercooling in the exchanger 29.
A flow of liquid oxygen 33 is tapped off from the low-pressure column, pressurized by the pump 35 and vaporized in the vaporizer 13 upstream of the exchange line 11. The fluid 33 may also be compressed by the effect of a hydrostatic head, without the pump 35.
Low-pressure nitrogen 31 is tapped off from the top of the low-pressure column 17 and is heated up in the exchangers 29, 11.
A medium-pressure gaseous flow of nitrogen 39 is tapped off from the top of the medium-pressure column 15 and split into two. One part 53 is sent to an upper vaporizer 23 of the low-pressure column 17 where it condenses before being returned to the medium-pressure column by way of reflux. The remainder of the nitrogen 41 is split into two, one portion 43 being sent to a cold compressor 51 to form a flow 55, and this flow 55 is sent to the bottom vaporizer 19 of the low-pressure column 17. In this vaporizer 19 it condenses and then acts as reflux for at least one of the columns.
The remainder 45 of the nitrogen is sent to the exchange line, is heated up to an intermediate level, and is sent to a turbine 47. The nitrogen expanded in the turbine 47 is sent to the cold end of the exchange line and heats up, becoming the flow 49.
This yields a potential energy saving of 0.5% over the scheme disclosed in WO-A-2007/129152.
Rich liquid 25, lean liquid 61 and possibly a liquid 27 somewhat like liquid air are sent from the medium-pressure column 15 to the low-pressure column 17 as reflux flows after supercooling in the exchanger 29.
A flow of liquid oxygen 33 is tapped off from the low-pressure column, pressurized by the pump 35 and vaporized in the vaporizer 13 upstream of the exchange line 11. The fluid 33 may also be compressed using a hydrostatic head, without the pump 35.
Low-pressure nitrogen 31 is tapped off from the top of the low-pressure column 17 and heats up in the exchangers 29, 11.
A medium-pressure gaseous flow of nitrogen 39 is tapped off from the top of the medium-pressure column 15 and split into two. One part 53 is sent to an upper vaporizer 23 of the low-pressure column 17 where it condenses before being returned to the medium-pressure column by way of reflux. The remainder of the air is once again split into two. One fraction is sent to the cold compressor 151 to become the flow 155 which heats the intermediate vaporizer 21 before being sent to the columns by way of reflux. The remainder of the nitrogen 41 is split into two, one portion 43 being sent to a cold compressor 51 to form a flow 55, and this flow 55 is sent to the bottom vaporizer 19 of the low-pressure column 17. In this vaporizer 19 it condenses and then serves as reflux for at least one of the columns.
The remainder 45 of the nitrogen is sent to the exchange line, is heated up to an intermediate level and is sent to a turbine 47. The nitrogen expanded in the turbine 47 is sent to the cold end of the exchange line and heats up, becoming the flow 49. Having the two cold compressors 51, 151 on the medium-pressure nitrogen line allows the distribution of power across the compressors to be adjusted to best suit the low-pressure column reboiling requirement.
An energy saving of 1.7% over the scheme of WO-A-2007/129152 can be achieved.
Rich liquid 25, lean liquid 61, and possibly a liquid 27 somewhat like liquid air are sent from the medium-pressure column 15 to the low-pressure column 17 by way of reflux flows following supercooling in the exchanger 29.
A flow of liquid oxygen 33 is tapped off from the low-pressure column, pressurized by the pump 35 and vaporized in the vaporizer 13 upstream of the exchange line 11. The fluid 33 may also be compressed using a hydrostatic head, without the pump 35.
Low-pressure nitrogen 31 is tapped off from the top of the low-pressure column 17 and is heated up in the exchangers 29, 11.
A medium-pressure gaseous flow of nitrogen 39 is tapped off from the top of the medium-pressure column 15 and split into two. One part 53 is sent to an upper vaporizer 23 of the low-pressure column 17 where it condenses before being returned to the medium-pressure column by way of reflux. The remainder of the air is once again split into two. One fraction is sent to the cold compressor 151 where it becomes the flow 155, the flow 155 being cooled in the exchange line 11 before being used to heat the intermediate vaporizer 21 before being sent to the columns by way of reflux. The remainder of the nitrogen 41 is split into two, one portion 43 being sent to a cold compressor 51 to form a flow 55, and this flow 55 is sent to the bottom vaporizer 19 of the low-pressure column 17 after having been cooled in the exchange line 11. In this vaporizer 19 it condenses and then serves as reflux for at least one of the columns.
The remainder 45 of the nitrogen is sent to the exchange line, heats up to an intermediate level and is split into two. One part 49 of the nitrogen 45 is sent to a turbine 47. The nitrogen expanded in the turbine 47 is sent to the cold end of the exchange line and is heated up before being used periodically to regenerate the purification unit 2. The remainder of the nitrogen 46 continues to be heated up in the exchange line 11 and is split into two, one part 149 being sent to a turbine 147 at a higher inlet temperature than the turbine 47. This part of the nitrogen is expanded, heated up and discharged into the atmosphere. The remainder 249 of the nitrogen is sent to a turbine 247 at a higher inlet temperature than the turbines 47, 147. This part 249 of the nitrogen is expanded, heated up and discharged into the atmosphere.
An energy saving of 7% over the scheme of WO-A-2007/129152 can be achieved.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0852705 | Apr 2008 | FR | national |
0852706 | Apr 2008 | FR | national |
0852707 | Apr 2008 | FR | national |
0852708 | Apr 2008 | FR | national |
0852709 | Apr 2008 | FR | national |
0852710 | Apr 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR09/50617 | 4/8/2009 | WO | 00 | 10/13/2010 |